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TRANSCRIPT
The Crypto Credit Report
Issue 4
Q1 2020
Page 1
Table of Contents
Table of Contents 1
Introduction 3
Corrections 3
Industry Snapshot 4 Industry | Q1 4
Overall 4 Private vs. DeFi 5
Active Debt 5 Active Collateral 5 LTV 5 Interest Generated 5
Industry | Commentary 5
Private Lending 7 Private Lending | Q1 7
Charts 8 Active Debt 8 Active Collateral 8 LTV 8 Interest Generated 8
Private Lending | Q1 | Commentary 8
DeFi 9 DeFi | Q1 9
Charts 10 Active Collateral 10 Liquidations 10 Active Debt 10 Active Collateral 10 LTV 10 Interest Generated 10
DeFi | Q1 | Commentary 11
Lenders 12
Data Sources 13
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Acknowledgements 15
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Introduction What mattered in Q1:
Investors and traders in both crypto and traditional markets sold off risky assets in favor of more stable assets. As a result, prices of volatile crypto assets fell causing liquidations across most exchanges. Overall, crypto assets lost $100 billion in value over the course of a week.
During the market crash in mid-March, private lending firms liquidated less than 10% of loans compared to DeFi which saw over 20% of loans liquidated. Overcollateralization across the industry and good communication between counterparties softened the blow of BTC losing 50% of its value in one day.
DeFi security breaches in Synthetix, Maker, bZx and dForce combined with the market crash in March contributed to the loss of locked collateral and subsequent lack of recovery of locked value throughout Q1.
Corrections In our last report (Q4 2019) we had an inaccurate split of Celsius consumer vs institutional numbers. All numbers in the report have been adjusted to accurately represent the split. In the previous report, we stated that Bankera offers crypto loan products. To clarify, Bankera Loans is a subdivision of the Bankera ecosystem which offers a variety of products and services including wallets and an exchange in addition to their Loan product. In the previous report, we stated that Ledn was founded in 2019. Ledn was founded in 2018 and offers consumer products in addition to their institutional arm. Collateral for institutional loans was updated to represent accurate assets under management. We are able to talk directly to a specific firm in order to clarify their self-reported numbers. As a result, we have much more accurate representation of the growth of the industry,
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Industry Snapshot
Industry | Q1
Overall
These numbers include public data from DeFi lenders and private data from consumer and institutional lenders. This represents 85% of lending firms. We have not adjusted our numbers to account for the 15% of the industry from whom we have not received data. If you know of a firm that is not represented in this report please bring this to our attention.
Q3 Q4 Q1 Q3/Q4 Q4/Q1
Active Debt (MM) $1,158 $1,791 $2,582 54% 44%
Active Collateral (MM)
$2,451 $3,615 $5,111 47% 41%
Interest Generated (MM)
$20 $29 $43 45% 48%
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Private vs. DeFi
Active Debt
Active Collateral
LTV
Interest Generated
Industry | Commentary The Crypto lending industry exhibited strong growth in Q1. Active debt grew by 44% leading to a 48% increase of interest generated. Assets under management grew as well to the tune 75%. An increased demand for stablecoins and the continued demand of BTC for the purpose of trading led to the debt growth, while further development of Interest bearing financial instruments and competitive interest rates continue to make crypto firms a smart place to store assets.
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The industry endured its first major stress test since its inception in 2018. The emergence of Covid-19 leading to the events of Black Thursday created a scenario that tested the integrity of these financial systems. Markets across the world responded to the threat of the virus by moving funds to fiat in anticipation of global economic slowdown as countries world-wide imposed stay-at-home orders. This created a liquidity event where risk assets were quickly sold. In a market such as crypto, where liquidity is already scarce, this caused prices to drop by almost 50% in one day. This drop led to massive losses on exchanges as highly leveraged traders were liquidated. On BitMEX alone, liquidations reached $750 million. Other exchanges experienced similar losses. In 1
total, crypto saw its market cap fall by $100 billion in one week. DeFi experienced similar losses due to the dropping price of crypto and several high profile technical slip ups. bZx, dForce and Maker contracts were all exploited. $35 million was lost between the 3 platforms. The private crypto credit market response, told a very different story. A big start to the quarter, strong and transparent communication between counterparties and appropriate action taken led to few liquidations on the institutional side. This preparation, coupled with a slight recovery in crypto prices towards the end of march, enabled the crypto credit market to experience overall growth quarter-over-quarter with active debt seeing 44% growth and active collateral (or assets under management) growing by 41%. In the retail world, proper KYC of customers allowed firms to give fair warning of impending price fluctuations. Crypto credit firms continue to demonstrate impressive stability in an industry built upon inherently volatile assets. With few liquidations and strong institutional relationships, these firms were able to maintain strong growth and maintain a bullish outlook for the rest of the year.
1 https://www.forbes.com/sites/billybambrough/2020/03/19/major-bitcoin-exchange-bitmex-has-a-serious-problem/#4ec8763d4f7d
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Private Lending We are reporting consumer and institutional lending as two separate categories . 2
Note that we use the price of assets at the end of the quarter to calculate USD values . 3
Private Lending | Q1 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q3/Q4 Q4/Q1
LTV 59% 56% 54% Consumer Institutional
27% 74%
43% 64%
38% 64%
Active Debt (MM) $1,015 $1,663 $2,430 63% 46% Consumer Institutional
$124 $891
$485 $1,178
$669 $1,761
291% 32%
37% 49%
Active Collateral (MM) $1,913 $2,955 $4,512 41% 66% Consumer Institutional
$621 $1292
$1,123 $1,831
$1,766 $2,746
42% 41%
99% 50%
Interest Generated (MM) $17 $26.2 $39.8 54% 51% Consumer Institutional
$5.3 $11.7
$8.8 $17.4
$14.6 $25.2
66% 48%
65% 44%
2 Consumer lending refers to firms that allow individuals to borrow and deposit relatively small amounts of crypto. Institutional lending refers to verified institutions making large, market making trades and borrowing or lending large amounts of crypto. 3 On March 30th, BTC was trading at $6,404 on Coin
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Charts
Active Debt
Active Collateral
LTV
Interest Generated
Private Lending | Q1 | Commentary
The private lending industry showed strong growth in every metric. Debt grew by 46%, collateral by 66% and interest generated by 51%. Q1 would have been the strongest quarter by far if not for the market crash in mid-March. Increased institutional activity and competitive interest rates in the retail IBA market contributed to growth. In our talks with lenders, we noticed that most were acutely aware of the potential for a market crash over a month before it actually occurred. Institutional lenders in particular prepared for
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impending turbulence through conversations with their counterparties who expressed anxiety over the growing pandemic as early as February. One firm mentioned that the unusual volume of BTC futures trading suggested a potential market crash leading them to reach out to their counterparties. As a result, these counterparties and clients either added collateral or repaid loans far in advance of March 12th, which led to low numbers of liquidations. The past quarter has shown that the volatile price of digital assets is not necessarily correlated with the health of the crypto lending industry. Before the market crash, Q1 was shaping up to be the best quarter in the history of crypto credit with firms seeing QoQ growth well over 100% in both active debt and collateral under management. Even after the crash, transparent communication and appropriate collateral allowed ending firms to maintain loans with their counterparties throughout this turbulent period. Miner lending is becoming a topic of interest. Lending out equipment against BTC is increasingly popular as miners cannot generally secure good rates with traditional lending firms. We anticipate rapidly shifting demand as Ethereum switches to PoS and BTC halvening approaches. More to 4 5
come in future reports. Private retail continued to increase in popularity as firms continue to offer competitive interest rates on crypto savings accounts and introduced new currencies on their platforms
DeFi We define DeFi as the collection of permissionless protocols that are built on smart contracts. Their data is publically available on the Ethereum blockchain. Some of our analysis groups data by protocol types: lending and liquidity. The remaining data looks at platforms that offer loans as a product. Lending protocols include Compound, dYdX, Maker, nüo, Aave, and Fulcrum/Torque. Liquidity protocols include Synthetix and Uniswap.
DeFi | Q1 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q3/Q4 Q4/Q1
Loans 20,385 38,867 90% Active Debt $141,533,000 $129,000,000 $152,000,000 -8% 18%
4 Proof of Stake. Further explanation can be found here. 5 The Halvening refers to an upcoming date where mining a BTC block will generate half as much of BTC as a reward.
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Active Collateral $539,000,000 $659,900,000 $599,200,000 21% -9% Interest Generated $3,752,800 $3,401,500 $3,171,250 -9% -7%
Charts
Active Collateral
Liquidations
Active Debt Active Collateral
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LTV Interest Generated
DeFi | Q1 | Commentary
DeFi saw active collateral fall by almost 9% in Q1 as the price of ETH dropped by over 50% in one day causing liquidations across every platform. Debt increased as new products continue to evolve, especially relating to Maker’s Multi-Collateral DAI, but interest generated continued to fall for a second straight quarter due to mass liquidations as well as short loan terms. Q1 of 2020 saw value locked in DeFi reach $1 billion for the first time in history. Unfortunately, the rise of Covid-19 made this a short-lived milestone as DeFi saw almost half its value disappear in less than a day due to the plummeting price of ETH in mid-March coupled with faulty liquidation protocols. The exploit of Maker occurred as a direct result of the market crash on March 12th.. A combination of lagging price feeds, over-congestion on the blockchain and liquidator bots that were not optimized for drastic price changes created an environment where a select few bots were able to seize bundles of 50 ETH for almost no collateral. Plunge in ETH price as well new protocols and products entering the market proved an opportune time to take out loans against a weaker ETH as new loans soared by 90% QoQ. While, DeFi lost almost half of its value during the market crash, debt saw growth as stablecoins like USDC and DAI make up a majority ,and thus are not affected by the price fluctuations of ETH. Furthermore, many liquidations occurred on Maker without any DAI getting burned keeping outstanding debt steady as collateral fell. However, active debt has remained strong as Makers Multi-Collateral Dai continues to provide new tokens to collateralize leading to a flurry of new loans. Aave has been promoting innovative products like flash loans to increase lending activity which led to tremendous growth throughout the quarter.
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Unlike privatized firms , DeFi did not see a bounce back of AUM and were not shielded from massive liquidations. Without an institutional sector to buoy the industry, locked collateral was liquidated at a much higher rate. ETH’s price recovered by 47% whereas BTC recovered by 72%. Since Defi is entirely backed by ETH, the industry did not see the same correction at the end of March that the private firms experienced. Synthetix looked to join the DeFi lending game, but a bug discovered in late March put this on pause. The bug was in reference to a faulty bit of code in the liquidation engine. More info can be found by following the link in the footnotes . 6
Lenders We currently categorize our lenders as follows: DeFi and private. Private lenders are further broken down by their target customers: consumer and institutional. Detailed descriptions of each lender can be found at https://credmark.com/the-industry/lender-appendix.
DeFi Consumer Institutional
bZx Protocol ✓
Compound ✓
dYdX ✓
Aave (formerly ETHLend) ✓
Maker ✓
nüo ✓
Synthetix ✓
6 https://blog.synthetix.io/bug-disclosure/
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Uniswap ✓
Bankera ✓
BlockFi ✓ ✓
Cred ✓ ✓
Celsius Network ✓ ✓
Constant ✓
Helio Lending ✓
Nebeus ✓
Nexo ✓ ✓
Ledn ✓ ✓
SALT ✓ ✓
Unchained Capital ✓ ✓
YouHodler ✓
DrawBridge ✓
Genesis Capital ✓
Lendingblock ✓
Trinito ✓
Data Sources 7
Source Publisher URL
DeFi Pulse Concourse https://defipulse.com/
Coinbase Coinbase https://coinbase.com
Genesis Report Genesis https://genesiscap.co/insights/q4-insights-2019/
Makerscan InstaDApp https://makerscan.io
MKR Tools Mike McDonald https://mkr.tools
LoanScan Dashboard LoanScan https://loanscan.io
Aave Dashboard Aave https://aave.com/
7 In addition to the many vendors who contributed their data for this report. See “Acknowledgements” below for a partial list.
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Dune Analytics Dune Analytics AS https://duneanalytics.com
Synthetix Dashboard Synthetix https://dashboard.synthetix.io/
Celsius App Celsius https://celsius.network/get-the-app/
Article Business Wire https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190910005976/en/Celsius-Network-Crosses-100-Active-Institutional-Accounts
Trinito Dashboard Trinito https://trinito.io/pool
Article Coindesk https://www.coindesk.com/25-million-in-2-weeks-blockfi-booms-as-bitcoin-ether-investors-seek-interest
Article Forbes https://www.forbes.com/sites/billybambrough/2020/03/19/major-bitcoin-exchange-bitmex-has-a-serious-problem/#4ec8763d4f7d
Article Lendingblock https://lendingblock.com/guides/collateral-management
Article dYdX https://medium.com/dydxderivatives/utilizing-margin-and-leverage-on-dydx-60b34ca8f3cb
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Acknowledgements The following people contributed data, insights, or other content to this report. Not all reporting vendors chose to be acknowledged.
Contributor Organization Title Abraham, Jarrett SALT Director of Corporate Development
Ahmad, Momin Credmark Lead Analyst
Alluri, Vamsi Maker Integration Engineer
Beach, Charlie Lendingblock COO
Cho, Young Celsius CFO
Di Bartolomeo, Mauricio Ledn Co-founder, CSO
Geiger, Phillip Unchained Capital Director of Product Marketing
Jasukaitis, Paulius Bankera Project Manager
Kelly, Joe Unchained Capital CEO
Kono, Kai Liquid Managing Director
Le, Claire Constant Business Development Manager
Leon, Daniel Celsius COO
Manolov, George Nexo Business Development Executive
Mashinsky, Alex Celsius CEO
Murphy, Paul Credmark CEO
Olson, Mats Dune Analytics CTO
Patel, Roshun Genesis Analyst
Petterson, Kelly Lendingblock CMO & Head of Business Development
Prince, Zac BlockFi CEO
Reeds, Adam Ledn Co-founder, CEO
Roper, Chris Constant Communications Manager
Saint-Donat, Paul dlab/SOSV Program Manager
Sato, Asahi Credmark Graphic Designer
Shapiro, Max Bitmex Associate
Swain, Steve Lendingblock CEO & Co-founder
Torrey, Dan Genesis Head of Institutional Sales
Trenchev, Antoni Nexo Managing Partner
Verma, Siddharth nüo Co-founder
Yin, Zhuoxun dYdX Head of Operations
Yoo, Eric Trinito Chief Strategy Officer
Zumwalde, Neil Credmark CTO
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